G.Skill TridentX DDR3-2600 CL10 RAM Kit Review

We’re back with another high speed G.Skill RAM kit review. This one is rated DDR3-2600 at a relatively tight CAS latency of 10 (full timings 10-12-12-31) and standard 1.65 V rating and model # F3-2600C10D-8GTXD. Can it overclock as well as their DDR3-2666 kit? Well, that’s what we’re here to find out.

Specifications & Product Tour

The specifications are pretty self-explanatory. Like all G.Skill RAM, this set comes with a lifetime warranty.

Now it’s time for the fun photo part of our review. Like most high-end G.Skill dual channel kits, the TridentX 2600C10D’s come in a nondescript box with an included fan.

G.Skill TridentX DDR3-2666 CL10 Box

G.Skill TridentX DDR3-2666 CL10

G.Skill TridentX DDR3-2666 CL10 Opened

While the sticks don’t get hot, there is an included fan if you choose to use it. If you have anything resembling adequate airflow in your case, you will not need this, but it’s here if you want it.

Included Fan Assembly

Fan Details

Here we have the main event, the great looking TridentX heatspreader design. I’ve been a fan since it came out. While it’s mostly unnecessary for heat dissipation, they definitely look good.

G.Skill TridentX DDR3-2666 CL10

G.Skill TridentX DDR3-2666 CL10

G.Skill TridentX DDR3-2666 CL10

G.Skill TridentX DDR3-2666 CL10

These are double-sided modules. Here you can also see the end screw for the top fin. The fins are removable by taking one of those screws out and simply sliding the fin off. This is useful if you need your high speed RAM in a low profile configuration or if you want to use a memory LN2 pot for extreme cooling.

Double-Sided DIMMs

Removable Top Fin

You know me and gratuitous photos, I can’t get enough!

G.Skill TridentX DDR3-2666 CL10

Last one, I promise.

Glamour Shot

Good looking sticks for sure! Let’s install them and start playing around.

Test System

Our test system consists of an Intel i7 3770K CPU, which thankfully has a strong IMC for testing higher frequencies and a Maximus V Extreme. Today we’ll be looking at comparisons from G.Skill itself, Patriot and ADATA.

Stability at Rated Speed

The first torture we put sticks through is the most stringent testing a normal consumer can get. The UltraX R.S.T. Pro3 PCIe card is used not only by crazy reviewers that enjoy torturing RAM, but by several companies for quality control. Companies typically test their sticks for three passes and then let them go out the door. We’re overclockers and normal stability isn’t an option; so we run it for five passes. After that, we can pronounce them forever stable at their rated speed. This TridentX kit passed with flying colors.

TridentX DDR3-2600 CL10 – RST Pro3 Passed

Of course, we do try testing that any layperson can run and give ye olde HyperPi a good run through. No problems here.

TridentX DDR3-2600 CL10 – HyperPi Stable

Absolutely rock solid stable, as expected. No G.Skill kit (zero, zilch) to date that has passed our test bed has failed stability testing, and I’ve tested a lot of RAM over the years.

Performance

Measuring RAM performance is one of the more mundane tests we do here. There just isn’t a ton of difference between RAM kits. Being Overclockers, RAM is very important and can absolutely mean the difference between beating someone in a benchmark and losing to them, but real-world testing doesn’t really show a huge difference between kits.

Synthetic Testing

Where you absolutely can see differences is in synthetic testing with programs like AIDA 64. These benchmarks turned out to be quite interesting. First off, a note about latency – When measuring latency, lower is better of course. That’s difficult to graph when considering three other metrics where higher is better. Thankfully, all our memory test graphs show relative performance as measured relative to the kit being tested. So, we just reverse the division for latency. That results in higher latency figures showing worse performance, thus higher in our latency graph is better. For instance, the TridentX kit being reviewed today had a latency of 31.0 ns. The Patriot kit had a latency of 38.4 ns. As shown in the graph, the TridentX kit’s performance is 18.7% better than the Patriot kit. As for the rest, they’re pretty self explanatory. Memory copy is a wash other than the ADATA kit, which tells me that was probably a testing anomaly. In copy, write and read, you can see the speed trade-off for the tighter timings seems to very nearly cancel each other out vs. the higher-speed, looser DDR3-2666 kit.

AIDA 64 Testing

Video Conversion and Rendering

Real-world testing is where things get boring. There is very little difference between any of the kits here.

Rendering and Video Conversion

Benchmarking

These are the programs that benchmarkers care about. The only one where RAM truly makes a difference in multiple seconds is SuperPi 32M, and that’s the one RAM people need to pay attention to. Here you can see that it prefers the tighter latencies of this kit to the faster speeds of the DDR3-2666 kit. WPrime, as always, is a crapshoot with RAM. As long as you have strong RAM (DDR3-2133 or above), you’re fine in WPrime.

Benchmarks

Overclocking

The last part of our reviews is far and away the best part when it comes to RAM – Overclocking! For starters, I wanted to see if the timings could be tightened at the default voltage and indeed they could. They went from their rated 10-12-12-31 to 10-11-11-28, SuperPi 32M stable. Remember, they’re already operating at 1T rather than their rated 2T, so this just sweetens the deal.

1.65V – Tightened Sub-Timings

It wouldn’t let me tighten the CAS latency (CL) though, so I bumped voltage to 1.75 V, leaving everything the same but dropping CL down to 9. Sure enough, passed SuperPi 32M without issue.

1.75V – DDR3-2600, CL 9

Ok, so they’re flexible on timings. How about speed? Why yes, thank you very much, they can do speed too. At their rated timings (and 1T) and voltage (1.65 V), they passed SuperPi 32M at DDR3-2700, no problem.

TridentX at DDR3-2700, Stock Timings & Voltage

Throw a bit more voltage at them (1.75 V) and they’ll pass SuperPi 32M at DDR3-2800 at their rated timings. Impressive.

Final Thoughts & Conclusion

Well then, after seeing those overclocking results, I think this kit speaks for itself. Like all high-end RAM, you’ll pay a decent premium for it. The G.Skill F3-2600C10D-8GTXD DDR3-2600 kit is currently for sale at Newegg for $164.99 shipped. Honestly, that’s not a bad price for what you get.

/Tangent/ If you follow the DRAM market, you’ve probably seen that prices are on the rise and that’s borne out with the pricing of this kit. Going forward, you can expect this to be a typical price for a high-end, 8 GB kit. They were actually a bit higher than the competition, but that’s just because G.Skill had already adjusted to the new market pricing. When I saw that, I emailed G.Skill and they explained indeed it is higher and the market is just headed that way. I believe the kits priced lower were just old stock, as currently all competitive kits are sold out (except this unfathomably dirt cheap 2666 Team Xtreem kit) and only G.Skill and Corsair remain on Newegg at the DDR3-2600/DDR3-2666 level; and G.Skill is priced better than Corsair. Actually, now that I’m looking, go buy these G.Skill DDR3-2666 sticks while they’re still $149.99, $15 cheaper than this kit. Once those are sold out, they’ll probably be priced higher. /Tangent/

Back to this particular kit. It’s absolutely rock solid stable at its rated speed and timings, it clocks to the moon, it tolerates tighter timings and it’s priced where it should be in the market. There is nothing at all to complain about and lots to love about this kit.

@TheHutchTTU
They'd be pretty much useless in an X79 board since the SB-E chips can't keep up and most can't even do 2400mhz frequencies.
Also found it interesting that you'd suggest for people to buy the 11-13-13@2666mhz sticks Hokie since they're $15-less, but they also run on different IC's. The C11 sticks should be on Hynix CFR an these run on Samsung HYK0 or HCH9 depending on luck of the draw. Either kit should be good though, the C10 set will run tighter timings/speeds while the C11 kit should be able to max out higher (all depending on your chips IMC of course)

Also found it interesting that you'd suggest for people to buy the 11-13-13@2666mhz sticks Hokie since they're $15, but they also run on different IC's. The C11 sticks should be on Hynix CFR an these run on Samsung HYK0 or HCH9 depending on luck of the draw.

I'm not allowed to disclose ICs, so I don't generally take heatspreaders off, but if you're right, I suppose I stand corrected. However, for my comment, it seemed like the overclocking ability on ambient with these sticks was very close to the same experience as the 2666 kit and if you can get the 2666 kit for $15 cheaper, why not?

Nice review! Kind of a lower bin Samsung's it seems...Might be a good kit to get for Haswell :D
As for the Team kit, yummy, hynix goodness. :p
Great review as usual, and it's apparent that you held back with the amount of pr0n pics.

Nice review! Kind of a lower bin Samsung's it seems...Might be a good kit to get for Haswell :D
As for the Team kit, yummy, hynix goodness. :p
Great review as usual, and it's apparent that you held back with the amount of pr0n pics.

Actually, I'd be careful going with the Team kit, look closely at the pic of the front of the PCB and I think that you'll see that the make up of the SMC reveals a single-sided module...most likely this is Hynix based, but with MFR chips on one side only. The performance hit from single-sided vs double-sided modules would keep me away from these.

I haven't noticed any issues with Team 2666 on single sided MFR. Actually now you get or 4GB sticks - single side or 8GB - double side so there is no big choice if you want 2x4GB kit.
btw. Nice review :thup: